Take a look at this beautiful classic sailing boat that
turned up in my home port last week. I love her
traditional long deep keel,
beautiful overhangs and wooden top- sides. She probably quite fast, an
excellent take-you-anywhere sea boat – a cruiser for serious cruising, and she
seems to be in remarkably good condition. Apparently a lot has been spent on
her. Just look at that gleaming hull.
Now, you can’t do this, but what if you took a much closer
look? What if, like me you could put your nose right up against her and look
along the length of the hull? Then you would see countless hairline cracks in
the gel-coat, visible only along the hull. Look straight at it and you won’t
spot a thing. Truth is, there is something awfully and expensively wrong – the gel
coat is crazed like a piece of Raku pottery and the only cure seems to be to
take it all off and re-coat.
So here she is today partially stripped. Stripping is the
easy bit – re-coating fairing and painting is going to take time and expertise.
Good luck to her owner and his bank balance.
And, for those of you busy sanding and renovating a GRP
hull, well here’s what she will look like if you sand too far. Interestingly,
the gel-coat on this boat seems to be remarkably thin. The older boats like the
one I’m working on have much greater depth.
Meanwhile here is another boat that turned up at about the
same time. She’s a Westerly 22, a slightly older cousin of the vessel I am
currently trying to renovate. She’s a funny looking old tub designed by
Commander Rayner who went on to set up the Westerly Boat
Company which produced one of the most popular sailing yachts of all time – the
Westerly Centaur, there are plenty of these here.
As for this Westerly 22, believe it or not, examples of this
diminutive sloop have crossed the Atlantic. Some say that with her turned-up
nose she looked like a banana. Rayner preferred to describe them as
‘Whalebacks’. They were built like tanks and some say they sail like tanks
also.
I hope she’ll stick around. As these boats age there are
less of them to be found in the UK and they certainly are a rarity in France.
It would be good to think that when I launch next year, my Nomad will be part
of a larger fleet of classic Westerlies.
PS: If you want to read more about my neck of the woods and life here please visit: Frugal Living in France
Seaward
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